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Relative Contribution of Intrapersonal and Partner Factors to Contraceptive Behavior Among Taiwanese Female Adolescents
Author(s) -
Wang RueyHsia,
Chiou ChiiJun
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of nursing scholarship
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.009
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1547-5069
pISSN - 1527-6546
DOI - 10.1111/j.1547-5069.2008.00217.x
Subject(s) - intrapersonal communication , psychology , sexual intercourse , family planning , population , demography , medicine , developmental psychology , clinical psychology , gynecology , social psychology , interpersonal communication , environmental health , research methodology , sociology
Purpose:To explore the relative contribution of intrapersonal factors (demographic data, sexual history, and self‐efficacy for contraception) and partner factors (perceptions of support from sexual partners for contraception, and relationship power) to contraceptive behaviors among sexually active female adolescents in Taiwan.Design:A cross‐sectional design. Female adolescents who have had a steady male sexual partner in the past 3 months (N= 375) were recruited as participants.Methods:Questionnaires including demographic data, sexual history, contraceptive behavior, self‐efficacy for contraception, perceptions of support from sexual partner for contraception, and perceptions of relationship power were submitted anonymously for this study.Findings:Participants who had their first sexual experience at less than 14 years of age and were from one‐parent families had the least comprehensive contraceptive behavior than did other participants. Number of steady sexual partners was significantly negatively correlated with contraceptive behavior. Self‐efficacy, perceptions of support from sexual partner for contraception, and relationship power all were positively correlated with contraceptive behavior. The important explanatory variables of contraceptive behavior were self‐efficacy, age of first sexual intercourse, intervals between sexual intercourse, and perceptions of support from sexual partner for contraception. These accounted for 39.1% of variance in contraceptive behavior.Conclusions:Intrapersonal factors (self‐efficacy, age of first sexual intercourse, and intervals between sexual intercourse) were more important than were partner factors (perceptions of support from sexual partners for contraception and relationship power) in influencing contraceptive behavior among sexually active female adolescents in Taiwan.Clinical Relevance:Intervention to increase contraceptive behavior among female adolescents should be focused more on intrapersonal factors than on partner factors.

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